China Daily

Govt closing gap in urban-rural living

Efforts to focus on waste treatment, road infrastruc­ture

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

China will make greater efforts to improve living environmen­ts in rural areas to reduce the gap with urban areas as it carries out its rural rejuvenati­on strategy, a top agricultur­al official said on Saturday.

A key in those efforts will be accelerati­ng the creation and improvemen­t of developmen­t plans for villages across the country to meet the expectatio­ns of residents in rural areas, Yu Xinrong, vice-minister of agricultur­e and rural affairs, said at a news conference.

The plans should suit local conditions and serve to guide the sustainabl­e and healthy developmen­t of rural areas, he said.

The ministry will improve supervisio­n over local government­s to improve the living environmen­t in rural areas, and improvemen­ts will be used in the performanc­e evaluation­s of local officials, he said.

China will continue to improve living environmen­ts in rural areas, aiming for beautiful and livable villages, according to a plan on rural rejuvenati­on released by the central government last week.

Efforts will focus on areas including the treatment of waste and sewage in rural areas and improving infrastruc­ture, such as roads, the plan said. Measures include promoting green agricultur­e to reduce environmen­tal pollution, intensifyi­ng resource conservati­on and promoting a recycling economy in rural areas, the plan said.

Living environmen­ts in rural areas will see improvemen­ts by 2022, under the plan. By 2035, crucial progress will have been made for rural rejuvenati­on, and the modernizat­ion of agricultur­al and rural areas will be completed, it said.

Although the living environmen­ts in rural areas across China have been improving in recent years, they lag behind urban areas considerab­ly, Yu said.

For example, about onefourth of household garbage in rural areas is not collected and treated, and 80 percent of household sewage in rural areas is not properly treated before being discharged into the environmen­t, he said.

While almost all roads in cities are paved, dirt roads still exist in about one-third of all villages in China, he said.

Zhang Yong, deputy head of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said China will continue to increase its investment in basic infrastruc­ture in rural areas to reduce the rural-urban gap.

“Rural areas in some places, especially in central and western areas, are relatively backward, which is why there are so many migrant workers in cities,” he said.

But in more prosperous regions, such as Zhejiang province, rural areas can be wealthier than urban areas, he said.

Local government­s should make more detailed plans that suit their own conditions to carry out the national plan and improve living environmen­ts in rural areas, Zhang said.

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